Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will say this…I actually founded a travel organization with the intent that it would be volunteer parent coaches supporting one paid coach and the fees would be set to cover 100% of just costs (umpires at games, some shared batting helmets (like 5 per team), one set of catcher’s gear, jerseys, tournament entrance fees, and field permit fees).
It added up to more than you would think. This was maybe 8 years ago and the direct costs were like $800/kid for a 15 person team.
The one paid coach was getting $2000 for the season for two practices per week, mainly DH on weekend and two tournaments. We didn’t do any overnight tourneys so we didn’t have to cover any travel costs for the coach.
I would imagine just those direct costs today would probably put it at $1200+ per kid.
So use that as a benchmark to determine if anyone is getting rich off their travel fees.
Why can traditional organizations like Little League do the same for far less? They are bleeding but often provide the same kind of experience (parent coaches with some who played at high levels — college and pro).
Anonymous wrote:I will say this…I actually founded a travel organization with the intent that it would be volunteer parent coaches supporting one paid coach and the fees would be set to cover 100% of just costs (umpires at games, some shared batting helmets (like 5 per team), one set of catcher’s gear, jerseys, tournament entrance fees, and field permit fees).
It added up to more than you would think. This was maybe 8 years ago and the direct costs were like $800/kid for a 15 person team.
The one paid coach was getting $2000 for the season for two practices per week, mainly DH on weekend and two tournaments. We didn’t do any overnight tourneys so we didn’t have to cover any travel costs for the coach.
I would imagine just those direct costs today would probably put it at $1200+ per kid.
So use that as a benchmark to determine if anyone is getting rich off their travel fees.
Anonymous wrote:I have a neighbor that is a teacher in local HS and her DH coaches boy's team in that specific HS. Both coach/run three travel teams their kids are on. Oldest kid got a scholarship for DIII LAX. DH works a well-paying job not related to LAX or teaching. We were invited to a few of their LAX kids parties and parents said that they keep it affordable and not too crazy. I think it depends on the coaches/team.
Anonymous wrote:Making "hundreds of thousands"? "Taking families money"?
Your entire premise is absurd. Public school coaches aren't making tons of money off some "scheme" - and if the club/private training business were so lucrative, there would be ZERO incentive for anyone to waste time coaching public school sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will say this…I actually founded a travel organization with the intent that it would be volunteer parent coaches supporting one paid coach and the fees would be set to cover 100% of just costs (umpires at games, some shared batting helmets (like 5 per team), one set of catcher’s gear, jerseys, tournament entrance fees, and field permit fees).
It added up to more than you would think. This was maybe 8 years ago and the direct costs were like $800/kid for a 15 person team.
The one paid coach was getting $2000 for the season for two practices per week, mainly DH on weekend and two tournaments. We didn’t do any overnight tourneys so we didn’t have to cover any travel costs for the coach.
I would imagine just those direct costs today would probably put it at $1200+ per kid.
So use that as a benchmark to determine if anyone is getting rich off their travel fees.
I'm on the board of an organization that includes a non-profit, volunteer run travel organization as part of it, and this checks out. We don't have the paid coach, but they do more tournaments than you stated (so more $$$), and you didn't mention the astronomical cost of winter training space.
Anonymous wrote:I will say this…I actually founded a travel organization with the intent that it would be volunteer parent coaches supporting one paid coach and the fees would be set to cover 100% of just costs (umpires at games, some shared batting helmets (like 5 per team), one set of catcher’s gear, jerseys, tournament entrance fees, and field permit fees).
It added up to more than you would think. This was maybe 8 years ago and the direct costs were like $800/kid for a 15 person team.
The one paid coach was getting $2000 for the season for two practices per week, mainly DH on weekend and two tournaments. We didn’t do any overnight tourneys so we didn’t have to cover any travel costs for the coach.
I would imagine just those direct costs today would probably put it at $1200+ per kid.
So use that as a benchmark to determine if anyone is getting rich off their travel fees.
Anonymous wrote:I have a neighbor that is a teacher in local HS and her DH coaches boy's team in that specific HS. Both coach/run three travel teams their kids are on. Oldest kid got a scholarship for DIII LAX. DH works a well-paying job not related to LAX or teaching. We were invited to a few of their LAX kids parties and parents said that they keep it affordable and not too crazy. I think it depends on the coaches/team.